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What happened to all those Chinese tourists?

India could help save Southeast Asia's tourism industry as the steady stream of vacationers from the world's second-largest economy turns into a trickle

July 28, 2023 / 10:13 IST
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Will the tourists ever return? Southeast Asia could be waiting a long time.

Before COVID, Malaysia’s luxury mall beneath Kuala Lumpur’s iconic Petronas Towers echoed with the sound of Chinese tourists and their dialects. But recently, during a busy dinner hour, they were missing. Din, the mall’s outlet of famous Taiwanese chain Din Tai Fung, a favorite of Chinese tourists, was half-full with local Malaysians and Middle Eastern customers. When I asked a cashier whether they had served many Chinese lately, she shook her head with a tight smile.

That’s a problem.

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China was once the world’s most plentiful source of international tourists, and Southeast Asia was among their top destinations. The buildup happened quickly. In the 2000s, affluence, a growing surplus of leisure time and a relaxation of government travel restrictions made tourism available to China’s rapidly expanding middle class. From 2009 to 2019, the number of travelers grew from 47.7 million to 154.63 million.

These new tourists spent handsomely. In 2019, Chinese accounted for one-fifth, or $255 billion, of international tourism spending. The effect on Southeast Asia was immense. Tourist receipts accounted for 5.7 percent of Malaysia’s gross domestic product in 2019, and Chinese tourists accounted for 17.8 percent of that revenue. Similarly, 11.4 percent of Thailand’s GDP was generated by tourism, with a whopping 28.1 percent accounted for by Chinese spending.